The table shows the current rank of each book and the change since last week, where:

= same as last week

+/- change since last week

+ back on list

++ new on list

x no longer on list (number of x’s: weeks off list)

All lists rank hardcovers and paperbacks separately, except for the USA Today list, which is a single list combining fiction and nonfiction in all formats. Dates shown are posted dates, except those in parentheses, which are dates compiled. New York Times posts its list one week in advance of print publication.

Note that some sources do not compile paperback bestsellers, and some exclude YA books (like the Harry Potter series) from their hardcover and paperback fiction lists.

It is the distant future: 1995. In this 21st installation of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, and the first female-led Marvel movie, Brie Larson plays Vers, a green blue-blooded member of the Kree, a technologically advanced race of aliens who value emotional control. Vers and her mentor, Yon-Rogg (Jude Law) lead a Starfleet Starforce secret mission against the Romulans Skrull, a shapeshifting race that has been at war with the Kree

Past Features

Entertainment Weekly‘s Lisa Schwarzbaum’s review of 9 contains a puzzling error about 4 paragraphs in: “The expanded cast of creatures looks great, dressed and animated in the homespun style Acker calls ”stitchpunk. (Fans of Acker’s original film devised the term ”steampunk” to describe the machine-y nuts-and-bolts-and-scrap-metal aesthetic that defines the movie’s look and the characters’ environment.)” Commentors, of course, have pointed out that, no, Acker’s fans had little to do

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